One of Windows 10 Mobile's truly distinctive and unusual features is Continuum. If you hook a phone up to a screen and, optionally, a mouse and keyboard, you can run desktop-style apps, albeit still powered by the phone. The connection to the screen and other peripherals can be wireless, using Miracast and Bluetooth, or wired, using the USB 3 Display Dock.

While the novelty of this is appealing, I'm not altogether sure that it's ever going to be a major selling point. There are a couple of reasons: first, it requires quite specific hardware (although Miracast with Bluetooth is quite widely available); second, it requires Universal Windows Apps that specifically enable the ability to run on a large screen.

I've been waiting for this since the iphone 3. For business people, to come into the office, pop your phone in a dock and theres your computer. A lot of businesses run thin clients anyway, why can't a phone run the screen and peripherals.Obviously content creators and cad designers or other power users wouldn't be able to do it that way, but for the average partially mobile desk jockey i don't know why it hasn't already happened.